Kingston v. Home Life Insurance Co. of America

101 A. 898, 11 Del. Ch. 258, 1917 Del. Ch. LEXIS 16
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedApril 19, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 101 A. 898 (Kingston v. Home Life Insurance Co. of America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kingston v. Home Life Insurance Co. of America, 101 A. 898, 11 Del. Ch. 258, 1917 Del. Ch. LEXIS 16 (Del. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

The six complainants', all stockholders of the Home Life Insurance Company of America, a Delaware corporation, have filed their bill against that company and the Home Protective Company, also a Delaware corporation, on behalf of themselves and of other stockholders. It appears that the officers of the two defendant companies are, and for more than nine years and during the transactions complained, of, have- been- the same persons, and during the same period a majority of the directors of the insurance Company were also directors of the Protective Company. Up to 1907, the Protective Company owned practically all the outstanding shares of. the Insurance Company and therefore controlled it. Afterwards, and until the latter part of 1913, the Protective Company sold shares of the Insurance Company at prices about double the par value ‘thereof. The shares so sold were sold largely in connection with policies of insurance negotiated by agents of the Insurance Company, the persons insured being given a right to take such shares. Some at least of the shares .so -disposed of, and others afterwards acquired by the Protective Company, were issued pursuant to an option given by the Insurance Company and acquired by the Protective Company. This option had its origin in the action of the directors of the Insurance Company at a meeting on October 29, 1906, whereby it gave to Paul Bright the exclusive right to' purchase one hundred thousand dollars worth of stock at par which was then one hundred dollars per share and which was-, afterwards reduced to ten 'dollars per share. At this time one hundred thousand dollars of stock had been issued out of an authorized capital of two" hundred and fifty thousand dollars. By an agreement dated April 15, 1907, the Protective Company purchased from Bright the entire good will and business of the Insurance Company and the entire outstanding stock, amounting to one hundred thousand dollars, at par ten dollars,- for the *261 total consideration of one hundred and fifty-five thousand dollars, and later Bright assigned to the Protective Company the option which he had to subscribe for stock of the Insurance Company. At a meeting of the stockholders of the Insurance Company held January 21, 1908, it was by motion duly carried agreed that the surplus earnings, if any, be paid to the Protective Company “for financing the Home Life Insurance Company of America,” and authority was given to the directors to increase the authorized capital from two hundred and fifty thousand dollars to not exceeding one million dollars, contemplating, of course, that proper legal steps would be taken for the purpose. At a meeting of the stockholders of the Insurance Company held February 16, 1909, a resolution reciting the giving of the option to Bright, the assignment thereof to the Protective Company and the proposed increase of capital, and also reciting that the Protective Company had contributed or advanced to the Insurance Company moneys and securities to enable it to maintain its legál reserve and build up its business,. and stating that the contributions or advances would continue as needed by the Insurance Company and be returned, out of surplus earnings, ' and extending the Option to include the entire capital stock, was adopted by the stockholders.

In explanation of the advances or contributions made by the Protective Company to the 'Insurance Company it was stated in the answer and shown that the moneys" were needed to acquire new business either through soliciting agents or by reinsuring the risks of other insurance companies, and under the insurance laws the usual income of the company could not be used for such purpose. -It was explained also that to grow rapidly it was necessary for a newly organized insurance company to make large expenditures in excess of the premiums collected by it in order to pay soliciting agents, and that after the business increased -to large proportions the receipts will exceed such expenses. In other words, it costs a new company more to place insurance than is received from those insured. To enable the Home Life Insurance Company to so grow rapidly the Protective Company paid to the Insurance Company at various times sums of money.

*262 Finally, at the annual meeting of the stockholders of the Insurance Company, held February 19, 1915, a resolution was .adopted reciting the action of the meeting of January 21, 1908; and that about four hundred and seventy thousand dollars had been received from the Protective Company by the Insurance Company, of which about eighty-one thousand dollars had been re-paid; and authorizing the execution of obligations for the sums so contributed and' advanced and those to be contributed and advanced, with interest at six per centum, the obligations to be made payable only out of surplus in excess of ten thousand dollars while the Insurance Company should continue in active business and the obligations should not be considered a lien or debt against the insurance Company, or be due or payable, except in the event of dissolution or retirement of the company. ■Up to 1912 the Protective Company actually held a majority of all the stock of the Insurance Company, and after that time though it had not control as a majority stockholder, it had.and still has power to secure control by exercising the option to take stock. The Protective Company now holds about six thousand shares of the Insurance Company^Dut of about sixteen thousand outstanding. About eighty-five hundred shares remain unissued, and the Protective Company has the right to take at par these unissued shares to the exclusion of the other stockholders. Between 1907 and the latter part of 1913 the Protective Company took under its option shares of the Insursance Company at par and sold them in connection with insurance policies at from'two to three times the par value, and from 1913 to 1916 took none. But in June, 1916, after some of the stockholders of the company had expressed dissatisfaction with its course and threatened to take legal proceedings, the Protective Company took at par thirty-seven hundred shares of the Insurance Company under the option. Up to a very recent, date the officers and directors of the insurance Company held very few of its shares, and were large holders of shares of the Protective Company, of which they were also 'officers and directors.

By the bill the complainants allege that the plan of financing the Insurance Company by the Protective Company was *263 fraudulent both inherently and by the method of carrying it out. The plan briefly stated was and is (and as to this there is no dispute) that the Protective Company should furnish to the Insurance Company money to acquire new business for the latter, and in return therefor the Protective Company was given a perpetual and exclusive right to subscribe to the stock of the Insurance Company at par, the Insurance. Company being liable to return all the money advanced, with interest, only out of surplus in excess óf ten thousand dollars, or in case of liquidation out of the assets of the company. It is alleged and shown that there were certain deceptions practiced by the officers of the two companies, who were the same persons, and particularly in the entries in the books of the Insurance Company and in its reports, official statements, which were misleading and evidence of a fraudulent purpose. It. is also alleged that dividends were paid otherwise than from earnings, and that the capital of the company had been impaired.

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Bluebook (online)
101 A. 898, 11 Del. Ch. 258, 1917 Del. Ch. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kingston-v-home-life-insurance-co-of-america-delch-1917.